I have been using this woodstain (natural oak) for the last 4 years, superb performance outdoors great quality without the need to re-paint year after year.
this is exactly what I was looking for. Thanks mate. EDIT: now that i've watched the video, you stopped short of actually showing what the colours looked like after 2nd coat. This vid didn't show much and even the full review doesn't say what colour you used in the end.
Have you tried to eliminate the excess at each hand coat? Also sanded the wood before applying it? Usually rough surfaces (or not finely sanded) make wood absorb more woodstain, so appearing darker. Leaving a side the type of wood (soft or hard which affect once more the final colour), soft absorb more so appear darker, hard absorb less so is more clear. I gave three hands of coating as suggested on the label and at each hand I added a trick to took away the excess of liquid with a cotton cloth, passed in the direction of the wood lines. Overall yes, each coating resulted slightly darker than the previous, but much lighter than pplying three coating with the brush without the method of eliminating excess explained above. Again, just an idea, there might be several factors influencing the final colour not only the number of coating.
It's impressive how quickly you can do that.
TIP Colour will be different on different types of wood ie soft wood or hard wood
Nice one. Nowhere shows the true colour of these. Just what I needed. 👍🏻
I have been using this woodstain (natural oak) for the last 4 years, superb performance outdoors great quality without the need to re-paint year after year.
Swift demonstration, thanks.... the dark mahongany was my favourite
Brilliant video thankyou !
this is exactly what I was looking for. Thanks mate.
EDIT: now that i've watched the video, you stopped short of actually showing what the colours looked like after 2nd coat. This vid didn't show much and even the full review doesn't say what colour you used in the end.
Helpful. Thanks for doing this.
Walnut be my preference.
Needs a second coat …. But the biggest problem in this video is the colour will look differently again on darker wood / hard wood or pre stained wood
Have you tried to eliminate the excess at each hand coat? Also sanded the wood before applying it?
Usually rough surfaces (or not finely sanded) make wood absorb more woodstain, so appearing darker. Leaving a side the type of wood (soft or hard which affect once more the final colour), soft absorb more so appear darker, hard absorb less so is more clear.
I gave three hands of coating as suggested on the label and at each hand I added a trick to took away the excess of liquid with a cotton cloth, passed in the direction of the wood lines. Overall yes, each coating resulted slightly darker than the previous, but much lighter than pplying three coating with the brush without the method of eliminating excess explained above.
Again, just an idea, there might be several factors influencing the final colour not only the number of coating.
Natural oak